Thu 6 Dec 2007
TiVo Hard Drive Replacement
Posted by Curtis under Geek Stuff
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My Hughes HDVR2 DirecTivo had been acting up on us lately. We’d turn the TV on and the TiVo would be locked up with just a black screen on a freezed frame from a show.
Most forums generally agreed that these symtoms were the signs of a dying hard drive, so I decided to order a new drive for the box and replace it.
The TiVo originally had a 40GB hard drive in it which I had replaced/upgraded a few years ago with an 80GB hard drive. Well I figured if we’re replacing, might as well go bigger right? So I bought 160GB hard drive and off I went.
It had been a while, so I refreshed my knowledge of how to do this by re-reading and downloading the tools on the Hinsdale how to site here
1) pulled the old drive
2) hooked up the old drive and the new drive in my pc
3) booted the mfstools CD that I downloaded from the site listed above
4) typed the mfsbackup | mfsrestore line showed in step 10 option 3 of the how to above
5) ERROR!!!
I found out after I had already bought the hard drive and started this process that you cannot upgrade to a larger hard drive if you’ve already upgraded once IF you want to keep your recordings. After a bit more reading I discovered it has to do with TiVo not being able to read more than 2 partitions on a hard drive. Well, the original 40GB hard drive had 1 partition. I then replaced it, copied everything over to an 80GB hard drive and told it to expand recording space and to do that the tools create a 2nd partition.
Bammo, when you then attempt to copy over those 2 partitions and create a 3rd it bombs out.
My two options were:
1) copy over just the OS and the settings, lose all my current recordings, but gain the additional 80 Gigs.
2) move everythig over as is and only have 80 gigs of the 160GB hdd used.
Well, some people probably think I’m stupid but I just went with option 2. We haven’t had any problems staying under the 66 hrs that 80 gigs gives us and I didn’t feel like taking the time to dump to DVD the couple things we wanted to save at this moment.
All this being said, we’ve been running on the new drive for several days now and so far so good. Now the lock ups were not very frequent so I don’t feel out of the woods yet, but I thought I’d share my experience and how to link in case you were interested. All in all, if you are at all familiar with hooking up IDE hdd(s) and can grasp linux hdd references (hda, hdb, etc…) then there’s no reason to not upgrade/fix your own TiVo.
